In 1847 the medical department of Columbian College became the National Medical College. In the early 1850s, it was in the forefront of medical education in the nation.The infirmary was enlarged in 1853, in response to growing need. The improved facility allowed the faculty to include clinical studies formally in the curriculum. Since few schools taught clinical medicine before the early twentieth century, this addition was remarkable in its foresight. With the beginning to the Civil War in 1861, the school entered a difficult era. Both medical students and faculty joined forces in the North and the South. Dr. A.Y.P. Garnett left Washington to become Jefferson Davis's personal physician, while Dr. Robert King Stone remained to serve Abraham Lincoln. After the war began, the government reclaimed the Infirmary for use as a military hospital, and less than seven months later the building was destroyed by fire. The medical college regrouped and in 1863 reopened in the Constitution Office on E Street between 12th and 13th Streets, NW. From 1865 to 1867 it shared space in the Columbia College Law Building on 5th Street between D and E Streets, NW. The hospital and medical school moved to 1335 H Street in 1868. This was the main hospital until 1948. The George Washington University Hospital (on 23rd Street, N.W.) was completed and opened in 1948. The Meyer Pavilion was added in 1968, Duncan Pavilion in 1978 and the Southeast addition in 1978. A new hospital was completed in 2002 and located on 23rd Street north of the Foggy Bottom Metro stop, across the street from the previous hospital.
From the description of University Hospital records, 1898-2004. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 641556079